Argument Against Racism

Words: 879
Pages: 4

“I have a dream” 53 years ago Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. gave us a vision of love, all living together in harmony, every one of us living together regardless of color or ethnicity, but with modern day terrorist day attacks all over the world people have become scared and race problems have become one of the most sensitive issues of our modern time; as a result race problems are resurging back in an alarming rate in America.
Racism happens to all of us and we have all witnessed it in our lives. But what is racism and how do we describe it? Uche Ikpa explains: “Racism means you’re judged before you stand up for yourself.” It is another word for arrogance; and when you are arrogant, you lose touch with reality because you don’t have a total view
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But how can we curtail race problems and learn to live together in peace- white, black, red, yellow, brown, etc., in America? I have faith that the answer to this problem is that instead of focusing on changing the deeply rooted mentality of people who discriminate, the solution lies on educating our posterity and focusing on teaching them the values of equality and tolerance, as Ipak argues: ”Racism is learned at childhood. Children are born ignorant. They don’t understand much at birth They cannot formulate words or understand them. Then parents begin the infusion of ideologies, teachings, nurturing that stabilizes the children as they grow. Whatever is taught, or inculcated to the child is what he or she grows up with. If you teach your child to discriminate against others because they are of another color or race, your child will grow up with that. You may not verbalize this, but your child watches your reactions, your negative words against other races, your stereotype words, your child will grow and demonstrate the same attitude like you. It is amazing how children absorb like sponge the tendency to imitate whoever raises